Chapter IV: How these things appear not decisive to infidels, and merely like so many pictures.

Chapter V: How the redemption of man could not be effected by any other being but God.

Chapter VI: How infidels find fault with us for saying that God has redeemed us by his death, and thus has shown his love towards us, and that he came to overcome the devil for us.

Chapter VII: How the devil had no justice on his side against man; and why it was, that he seemed to have had it, and why God could have freed man in this way.

Chapter VIII: How, although the acts of Christ's condescension which we speak of do not belong to his divinity, it yet seems improper to infidels that these things should be said of him even as a man; and why it appears to them that this man did not suffer death of his own will.

Chapter IX: How it was of his own accord that he died, and what this means: "he was made obedient even unto death;" and: "for which cause God hath highly exalted him;" and: "I came not to do my own will;" and: "he spared not his own Son;" and: "not as I will, but as thou wilt."

Chapter X: Likewise on the same topics; and how otherwise they can be correctly explained.

Chapter III: How man will rise with the same body which he has in the world.

Chapter IV: How God will complete, in respect to human nature, what he has begun.

Chapter V: How, although the thing may be necessary, God may not do it by a compulsory necessity; and what is the nature of that necessity which removes or lessons gratitude, and what necessity increases it.

Chapter VI: How no being, except the God-man, can make the atonement by which man is saved.

Chapter VII: How necessary it is for the same being to be perfect God and perfect man.

Chapter VIII: How it behooved God to take a man of the race of Adam, and born of a woman.

Chapter IX: How of necessity the Word only can unite in one person with man.

Chapter X: How this man dies not of debt; and in what sense he can or cannot sin; and how neither he nor an angel deserves praise for their holiness, if it is impossible for them to sin.

Chapter XI: How Christ dies of his own power, and how mortality does not inhere in the essential nature of man.

Chapter XII: How, though he shares in our weakness, he is not therefore miserable.

Chapter XIII: How, along with our other weaknesses, he does not partake of our ignorance.

Chapter XIV: How his death outweighs the number and greatness of our sins.